Hiraeth – Michael Lee RATTIGAN

‘Poetry is the other voice’, wrote Octavio Paz, referring to what is re-created in silence, beyond history, and to what governs man’s conversations and etymological thrusts. Michael Lee Rattigan also has been seeking to pinpoint that ‘other’ voice, as each of his poems seems to exist only to advance silence, or at least our unmediated access to it—for this poet does not shape a merely verbal language, but establishes an impalpable syntax of listening. In this collection, he succeeds in crossing what the poet Philippe Jaccottet described as ‘the unique uncrossable space’, a no-place of conflicting truths, a living territory of the soul and of the poetic mind, on which the imagination can be projected anew.

Michael Lee Rattigan has lived and taught in Mexico and Spain, and translated the complete collection of Fernando Pessoa’s Alberto Caeiro Poems (Rufus Books, 2007). More translations have appeared in The Los Angeles Review, Asymptote Magazine, The Black Herald, The Fiend Journal, and in Selected Writings of César Vallejo (ed. Joseph Mulligan, Wesleyan University Press, 2015). His poetry collection Liminal was published in 2012 (Rufus Books).